A film that leaves you with a clean taste

Kathryne 2022-06-06 17:10:34

I am no great fan of youthful idealism, but I must confess to a secret fascination with the Spanish Civil War. If you share this interest, and/or my other, more reluctant admiration of the early Chinese Communists, then this film is for you, too.

Nothing kills a movie about idealism faster than a Utopian, absolutist tribute to a perfect ideal. This film, fortunately, manages to steer clear of the usual temptation of idolizing the youth, and their dreams of liberty and equality. We are shown the mundane stuff these lovely men and women are made of: not too smart, not so pure, not always steadfast, but take us in with that honest urgency, that earnestness of doing good, which looks and feels both alien and touching to us petite bourgeoisie, with our petty ambition and white-washed materialism.

The cinematography is stunning, although I feel the blue tint must be a deliberate choice, to obscure the muddiness and squalor of the trench life. The storyline is lively, too, although the girl's death, in the end, seems rather contrived. Ken Loach does have his limitations.

I strongly recommend a companion volume to this film: the incomparable book, "Homage to Catalonia", by George Orwell. This is the single best book about one's participation in a revolution, intelligent, moving and clear-headed, and beautifully written.

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Extended Reading

Land and Freedom quotes

  • David: Revolutions are contagious.

  • [last lines]

    Kim, David's granddaughter: The other day I found this. It was amongst my granddad's papers, and I just thought it was, like, fitting for him. It's a poem by William Morris, and I'd just like to read it out: "Join in the battle, wherein no man can fail. For whoso fadeth and dieth, yet his deeds shall still prevail."